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Command-Line Printing Options

Setting the Default Printer

If you normally use a particular printer, you can tell CUPS to use it by default using the lpoptions(1) command:

lpoptions -d printer

If you would also like to use set a default printer for the lpq command, you
can set it using:

export PRINTER printer

Creating Saved Options

Saved options are supported in CUPS through printer instances. Printer instances are, as their name implies, copies of a printer that have certain options associated with them. Use the lpoptions command to create a printer instance:

lpoptions -p printer/instance -o name=value ...

The -p printer/instance option provides the name of the instance, which is always the printer name, a slash, and the instance name which can contain any printable characters except space and slash. The remaining options are then associated with the instance instead of the main queue. For example, the following command creates a duplex instance of the LaserJet queue:

lpoptions -p LaserJet/duplex -o sides=two-sided-long-edge

Instances do not inherit lpoptions from the main queue.

Setting the Orientation

The -o landscape option will rotate the page 90 degrees to print in landscape orientation:

lpr -o landscape filename

The -o orientation-requested=N option rotates the page depending on the value of N:

Printing single-sided

Selecting a Range of Pages

The -o page-ranges=pages option selects a range of pages for printing:

lpr -o page-ranges=1 filename

lpr -o page-ranges=1-4 filename

lpr -o page-ranges=1-4,7,9-12 filename

As shown above, the pages value can be a single page, a range of pages, or a collection of page numbers and ranges separated by commas. The pages will always be printed in ascending order, regardless of the order of the pages in the page-ranges option.

The default is to print all pages.

Note:

The page numbers used by page-ranges refer to the output pages and not the document's page numbers. Options like number-up can make the output page numbering not match the document page numbers.

The -o page-border=value option chooses the border to draw around each page:

-o page-border=double; draw two hairline borders around each page

-o page-border=double-thick; draw two 1pt borders around each page

-o page-border=none; do not draw a border (default)

-o page-border=single; draw one hairline border around each page

-o page-border=single-thick; draw one 1pt border around each page

The -o number-up-layout=value option chooses the layout of the pages on each output page:

-o number-up-layout=btlr; Bottom to top, left to right

-o number-up-layout=btrl; Bottom to top, right to left

-o number-up-layout=lrbt; Left to right, bottom to top

-o number-up-layout=lrtb; Left to right, top to bottom (default)

-o number-up-layout=rlbt; Right to left, bottom to top

-o number-up-layout=rltb; Right to left, top to bottom

-o number-up-layout=tblr; Top to bottom, left to right

-o number-up-layout=tbrl; Top to bottom, right to left

Scaling to Fit

The -o fit-to-page option specifies that the document should be scaled to fit on the page:

lpr -o fit-to-page filename

The default is to use the size specified in the file.

Note:

This feature depends upon an accurate size in the print file. If no size is given in the file, the page may be scaled incorrectly!

Text Options

CUPS supports several options that are only used when printing plain text files. These options have absolutely no effect on PostScript, PDF, HP-GL/2, or image files. Setting the Number of Characters Per Inch

The -o cpi=value option sets the number of characters per inch:

lpr -o cpi=10 filename

lpr -o cpi=12 filename

lpr -o cpi=17 filename

The default characters per inch is 10.

Setting the Number of Lines Per Inch

The -o lpi=value option sets the number of lines per inch:

lpr -o lpi=6 filename

lpr -o lpi=8 filename

The default lines per inch is 6.

Setting the Number of Columns

The -o columns=value option sets the number of text columns:

lpr -o columns=2 filename

lpr -o columns=3 filename

The default number of columns is 1.

Setting the Page Margins

Normally the page margins are set to the hard limits of the printer. Use the -o page-left=value, -o page-right=value, -o page-top=value, and -o page-bottom=value options to adjust the page margins:

The value argument is the margin in points; each point is 1/72 inch or 0.35mm.

Pretty Printing

The -o prettyprint option puts a header at the top of each page with the page number, job title (usually the filename), and the date. Also, C and C++ keywords are highlighted, and comment lines are italicized:

lpr -o prettyprint filename

Turning Off Text Wrapping

The -o nowrap option disables wrapping of long lines:

lpr -o nowrap filename

CUPS supports several options that are only used when printing image files. These options have absolutely no effect on PostScript, PDF, HP-GL/2, or text files.

Positioning Images

The -o position=name option specifies the position of the image on the page:

center - Center the image on the page (default)

top - Print the image centered at the top of the page

left - Print the image centered on the left of page

right - Print the image centered on the right of the page

top-left - Print the image at the top left corner of the page

top-right - Print the image at the top right corner of the page

bottom - Print the image centered at the bottom of the page

bottom-left - Print the image at the bottom left corner of the page

bottom-right - Print the image at the bottom right corner of the page

Scaling Images

The -o scaling=percent, -o ppi=value, and -o natural-scaling=percent options change the size of a printed image:

lpr -o natural-scaling=percent filename

The scaling=percent value is a number from 1 to 800 specifying the size in relation to the page (not the image.) A scaling of 100 percent will fill the page as completely as the image aspect ratio allows. A scaling of 200 percent will print on up to 4 pages.

The ppi=value value is a number from 1 to 1200 specifying the resolution of the image in pixels per inch. An image that is 3000x2400 pixels will print 10x8 inches at 300 pixels per inch, for example. If the specified resolution makes the image larger than the page, multiple pages will be printed to satisfy the request.

The natural-scaling=percent value is a number from 1 to 800 specifying the size in relation to the natural image size. A scaling of 100 percent will print the image at its natural size, while a scaling of 50 percent will print the image at half its natural size. If the specified scaling makes the image larger than the page, multiple pages will be printed to satisfy the request.